experts
Salman Ahmed
Nonresident Senior Fellow, Geoeconomics and Strategy Program

about


Salman Ahmed is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Salman Ahmed served as a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he directed research and led a task force dedicated to making U.S. foreign policy work better for the middle class. Ahmed has managed complex international security challenges on behalf of the White House, the U.S. Department of State, and the United Nations for the past twenty-five years.

Prior to joining Carnegie, Ahmed served as special assistant to the president and senior director for strategic planning on the National Security Council staff at the White House. Under Ahmed’s leadership, the Strategic Planning Directorate led preparation of the 2015 National Security Strategy and facilitated high-level internal deliberations on long-term trends shaping the strategic environment. He partnered with NSC colleagues on the development of policies and strategies on a broad range of issues, from the rebalance to Asia and countering the self-proclaimed Islamic State, to technology and national security. Ahmed also directly supported then secretary of state John Kerry’s negotiations with Russia on Syria between 2013 and 2016. He was the co-chair of the International Ceasefire Task Force in Geneva.

Prior to assuming his duties on the National Security Council in July 2013, Ahmed was chief of staff of the United States Mission to the United Nations and senior policy advisor to the United States Permanent Representative to the United Nations.  Before joining the U.S. Department of State in 2009, Ahmed served as a visiting professor and research scholar at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, where he taught graduate-level courses on peacekeeping and post-conflict reconstruction. Prior to teaching at Princeton, he worked for almost fifteen years at the United Nations, including posts as chief of staff for the Head of UN Peacekeeping Operations, secretary of the Panel on UN Peace Operations (“the Brahimi Report”) that put forward sweeping reforms for overhauling the way the UN mounted multi-billion dollar peace operations; co-drafter of the UN Secretary General’s Report on the Fall of Srebrenica that candidly exposed deep failings in the UN’s “Safe Area” policy; and in various other capacities planning and serving in field missions in Iraq (2003, 2004), Afghanistan (2001-2002), Bosnia and Herzegovina (1996-1998), South Africa (1994), and Cambodia (1992-1993).

Ahmed holds a master’s degree in international relations from the University of Cambridge, and a bachelor of science in economics from New York University’s Stern School of Business. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.


education
MPhil, University of Cambridge, BS, New York University’s Stern School of Business

All work from Salman Ahmed

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12 Results
report
Making U.S. Foreign Policy Work Better for the Middle Class

To help expand and sustain America’s middle class, U.S. foreign policy makers need a new agenda that will rebuild trust at home and abroad.

  • +8
· September 23, 2020
In The Media
in the media
A Closer Look: Nebraskans on U.S. Foreign Policy

The key takeaways of a new report on Nebraskans’ views of foreign policy.

· June 2, 2020
report
U.S. Foreign Policy for the Middle Class: Perspectives From Nebraska

As millions of Americans contend with lost wages and savings due to the coronavirus, the challenge of making U.S. foreign policy work harder for the middle class is even more vital.

  • +14
· May 21, 2020
report
U.S. Foreign Policy for the Middle Class: Perspectives from Colorado

While the U.S. economy has been growing and unemployment rates have fallen, too many Americans still struggle to sustain a middle-class lifestyle. Are changes to U.S. foreign policy required to better advance the economic well-being of America’s middle class?

  • +11
· November 5, 2019
In The Media
in the media
How UNGA Happens

The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) gathers world leaders in New York this week. But how does it really work?

· September 26, 2019
event
The End of American World Order?
February 14, 2019

Whether or not America itself declines or thrives under President Trump’s leadership, the post-war liberal international order underpinned by U.S. military, economic, and ideological primacy and supported by global institutions serving the United States’ power and purpose is no longer stable.

  • +1
Q&A
Is U.S. Foreign Policy Working for Ohio’s Middle Class?

Does the United States need to make big changes to its foreign policy in order to make middle class Americans economically better off? Looking at Ohio as a case study, Carnegie brought together a bipartisan group of former policymakers along with researchers from The Ohio State University to find out.

· December 13, 2018
report
U.S. Foreign Policy for the Middle Class: Perspectives From Ohio

Policymakers need to explore ways to make U.S. foreign policy work better for America’s middle class, even if their economic fortunes depend largely on domestic factors and policies.

  • +11
· December 10, 2018
event
Next Generation Policymakers in an Age of Global Disruption
June 7, 2018

The Carnegie Junior Fellows Conference will engage young professionals in the field of foreign policy on emerging long-term policy challenges.

  • +6
In the Media
Trump Has Set a Scary Strategic Precedent

The Trump administration has managed to provide some answers to some outstanding questions in its national security strategy. But it has left even more unanswered.

· December 21, 2017
Foreign Policy